Push for more border troops comes amid falling crime statistics

Congress may be hard-pressed this week to make its case for
sending 6,000 National Guardsmen to the U.S.-Mexico border in the face of newly
available national statistics that show low and declining levels of violence in
cities within the southwest region.

But the impending debate comes amid newly released FBI
statistics that show low levels and an overall decline in instances of violence
and crime in major border-region cities.

The numbers, released by the FBI before the Memorial Day recess, show that
Phoenix, San Diego and El Paso, Texas, all have some of the lowest rates of violent
crime compared to other cities throughout the United States.

Between 2008 and 2009 instances of violent crime in Phoenix
dropped by more than 16 percent and the number of murders decreased by more
than 17 percent. Violent crime in San Diego dropped by nearly 2 percent and
murders fell by more than 25 percent. In El Paso, levels of violent crime
remained the same, but the number of murders dropped by nearly 30 percent,
according to the FBI’s latest statistics.

Nationwide, violent crime decreased by about 5 percent last
year. Violent crimes within counties that run along the Mexican border have
seen a 30 percent decrease over the past 20 years and remain some of the lowest rates
in America.

But McCain and Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer (R) have argued that
Arizona is plagued by drug runners and kidnappers who helped make Phoenix the
“kidnap capital” of the U.S. in 2008.

When Brewer met with Obama last week, she said she
was “encouraged” by his move to send officials to Arizona in the next several
weeks to update and instruct state officials on the latest deployment of
National Guardsmen.

Obama’s move, which promises $500 million in extra funding
for border security, came after his recent meeting with Mexican President Felipe
Calderon and on the heels of many calls from border-region lawmakers to send
troops.

Last week, the first unmanned aerial vehicle took to
the skies for its first of many surveillance flights along the U.S.-Mexico
border, gathering real-time information for law enforcement officials about
illegal movements along the 2,000 miles of border.

Congress’s renewed attention to the violence followed the
recent slayings of a U.S. consulate worker in Mexico and an Arizona border
rancher. More than 22,700 people have been killed since Calderon took power in
2006 and began an all-out war against drug cartels in his country.

Calderon has deployed 45,000 army soldiers to dangerous
cities and regions throughout Mexico – including 7,000 to Juarez, where more
than 4,500 people have been killed in the past two years.